What SCOTUS decision on voting rights means
Media Matters for America · 122,466 like this
45 minutes ago ·
Today the conservative wing of the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act of 1965, striking down decades of civil rights precedent and clear Congressional intent.
Here are five things you should know about a case that will open the door to increased efforts at voting suppression:
1) The Voting Rights Act was passed by Congress and signed into law by Lyndon Johnson in the wake of the bloody attack on voting rights supporters in Selma, Alabama.
2) Because of the repeated and incorrigible voting suppression of states in the Old Confederacy, the Voting Rights Act has a provision - Section 5 that requires states with a demonstrated history of infringing on voting rights to preclear any election changes with the Department of Justice.
3) Although the covered states were originally those who practiced Jim Crow, another provision Section 4 contained a flexible formula that allowed these states to bail out if they stopped illegally discriminating and could bail in new states that suppressed the vote.
4) These sections working in tandem have been upheld as constitutional four times by the Supreme Court and have been repeatedly updated and reauthorized by Congress, most recently in 2006, because of continued and entrenched voter suppression.
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